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Iran Conflict 2026
18JUL

Hormuz risk lifts the Brent-Dubai EFS

2 min read
13:17UTC

The Brent-Dubai EFS jumped about 21% to $4.24 a barrel on 8 July as Hormuz risk returned, while flat-price Brent settled up just 5.2% at $78.02.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The Hormuz premium landed in the Brent-Dubai spread, not the flat price, and now fights an opposing OPEC+ trade.

The Brent-Dubai EFS (Exchange for Swaps, the cash bridge that prices light Atlantic Brent against the Middle Eastern Dubai marker) jumped about 21% in a day to $4.24 a barrel on Wednesday 8 July as Strait of Hormuz risk came back into the tape 1. The premium reasserted in Brent specifically, against Dubai, rather than lifting the whole crude complex evenly, and that is what makes it a spread story rather than a flat-price one.

The trigger sits on another desk. After IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) strikes on commercial vessels near Hormuz and the CENTCOM (US Central Command) retaliation that followed , Brent settled 5.2% higher at $78.02 on Wednesday, having briefly topped $80 intraday before fading 2. It held that war premium into Thursday 9 July . The intraday-$80 against a settle near $78 is the desk's tell: the fear held the tape for an afternoon, not the close.

That move partially unwinds last week's trade. When OPEC+ (the producer group led by the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and Russia) lifted August supply , it widened Brent-WTI (West Texas Intermediate) to $3.26 on a narrowing-to-come bet . A Brent-Dubai widening now pulls against a Brent-WTI trade set up on the opposite logic, in the same five sessions. The April spike took this same spread to $21 a barrel; at $4.24 the market is repricing risk, not repeating the panic.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Brent-Dubai EFS (Exchange of Futures for Swaps) is a trading instrument that measures how much more expensive Brent crude, the main European oil benchmark, is compared with Dubai crude, the main Middle Eastern benchmark. When Gulf shipping risk rises, that gap widens because buyers pay more to avoid sourcing oil that has to pass through the Strait of Hormuz. On 8 July the gap jumped 21% to $4.24 a barrel, a sign traders are nervous about the Strait again, though still far below the $21 peak reached in April when the risk was at its worst.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The EFS tracks the price gap between Atlantic (Brent) and Middle Eastern (Dubai) sour grades, so it widens specifically when Gulf loading risk rises relative to everywhere else, rather than tracking the flat oil price. At $4.24 it sits at a fifth of April's $21 peak, meaning the market is pricing renewed risk but not yet the severity that followed the original CENTCOM blockade.

The fact that Brent itself only firmed 5.2% to $78.02 while the spread jumped 21% shows the reflation is concentrated in the Gulf-specific instrument rather than the global benchmark, the structural signature of a localised risk repricing rather than a supply-wide shock.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If Kpler's vessel-tracking data begins showing actual Hormuz transit delays rather than just spread widening, the EFS move would signal a genuine physical disruption rather than a hedging repricing.

First Reported In

Update #15 · Three shocks, one week, across the oil spreads

S&P Global Commodity Insights· 10 Jul 2026
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